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Posted Under Paganism & Witchcraft

The Wicca Factor, or When I Became a Witch

Incense Stick and Tea Light

When did I become a Witch? I really don't know—or, rather, I could as well say I was born that way.

No, I was not born into a Wiccan family, although my parents and grandparents had largely occult and even a Pagan approach to life. My grandfather was a very active Theosophist for years, serving even as a national vice-president. He was also a civil rights activist before that phrase was even used or there were organizations that became a movement. My father was a vegetarian when some asked where that country was, and a naturalist sometimes seen running naked in the rain by country neighbors.

Witches Not Made
But those are not the things that make one a Witch. Nor, do I believe, is one "made" a Witch. For me it was the way I saw the world in which we live. I see it as everything connected to everything, with more things invisible than visible and endowed with mystery and given life through love. You may give that Weltanschauung a name other than Witchcraft—mystical, magical, wonderful, alive—but I found the "W" word and identified with it.

And my childhood reading included the available occult books, mostly Theosophical from my grandfather's library. As an adult I moved onward into the then-rare books of Dion Fortune and Aleister Crowley, Rudolph Steiner, and Alice Bailey, and included supernatural fiction, FATE Magazine, parapsychology, and the whole range of what we now call New Age. And I believe it is a New Age in which there has been a shift in consciousness and an influx of energies that is rapidly leading to a "New World Order."

Llewellyn History
But, I have not yet addressed the Wiccan Factor in Llewellyn's history.

One of those early books I read so eagerly was Witchcraft: Its Power & Influence in the World Today by an adventure writer named William Seabrook. This was in 1940, and I assure you it was one of the most contemporary treatments of the subject available sixty-two years ago! This was before Gerald Gardner's first Witchcraft novel in 1949 and his "real" books in the 1950s. Seabrook treated Witchcraft as a natural power practiced in many places in many guises—from astral travel to Voudoun. But he mentioned a device of wood and leather straps suspended by chains he identified from old engravings and books on medieval sorcery as a "witch's cradle." In our modern terminology, the occupant of the cradle would move into an altered state of consciousness through the combination of sensory deprivation, rigid posture, and swinging motion.

I sought eagerly for more information on this, without results. After Gerald Gardner published The Meaning of Witchcraft, I wrote and asked him what he knew of this device. He answered graciously, and we carried on a correspondence that has been reported elsewhere. He advised that he could not answer my questions directly because of his oaths, but he referred me to other people who would. This led not only to answers on that question, but to my receipt of so-called "Weschcke Papers," in which there was a nearly complete but early version of Gerald's Book of Shadows.

Developing Interest
My interest in Witchcraft evolved, but then I met Ed Fitch and later published Ray Buckland's Witchcraft From the Inside and Practical Candle Burning. That led to correspondence with Lady Sheba, who submitted her Book of Shadows and Grimoire of Lady Sheba, and to my meeting with her and initiation into Wicca.

Into the Present—and Future
It was from this time that Llewellyn's involvement with Wicca commenced. In the 1970s, we sponsored Occult Festivals and Witchmeets, one of which led to my drafting of "The Principles of Wiccan Belief." I did a lot of lecturing and PR in schools and churches, and on radio and TV, and performed Wiccan Weddings as a licensed minister. We also published Gnostica magazine, in which Wicca and Magick were the dominant interests, leading to more books on these subjects. Thus, the Wiccan Factor became of major importance in Llewellyn's one hundred-year history. Today we see Wicca and Witchcraft moving on to ever more exciting territory—intermediate and advanced books, structured programs for study, recoveries of once lost techniques, and wisdom and new rituals and practices for today's needs.

Wicca/Witchcraft is both the "Old Religion" and the newest, free to grow without the restraint of dogma and rigid authority of institutional religions. A religion and craft for today, and tomorrow in which Sandra and I have been proud to play a small role.

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About Carl Llewellyn Weschcke

Carl Llewellyn Weschcke (Minnesota) was the owner and chairman of Llewellyn Worldwide, the world's oldest and largest metaphysical publisher. He played a seminal role in the rise of Wicca and Neo-Paganism in the 1960s and ...

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